- The
Salic law (/ˈsælɪk/ or /ˈseɪlɪk/; Latin: Lex salica), also
called the
Salian law, was the
ancient Frankish civil law code
compiled around AD 500 by...
- in a
specified order (e.g., male-preference primogeniture,
Salic primogeniture, semi-
Salic primogeniture).
Variations have
tempered the traditional, sole-beneficiary...
-
Salic Law is a
solitaire card game
using two
decks of 52
playing cards each. It is
named after the
Salic Law which prohibits women from
ascending to the...
- semi-
Salic law until recently is Luxembourg,
which changed to
absolute primogeniture in 2011.
Former monarchies that
operated under semi-
Salic law included...
- 21st century,
scholars no
longer generally accept that the term "
Salic" in
Salic law referred to any
tribe by the 5th century, and some
historians argue...
- his authority.
Salic law was the
ancient Frankish civil law code
compiled around 500 AD by the
first Frankish King, Clovis.
Roman Law was
written with...
-
based on the ****ertion that the 6th
century Frankish legal code
known as
Salic law applied to the
succession and
excluded inheritance of the
crown by or...
- Europe,
ruling every form of
provincial unit from
kingdoms to manors.
Salic law, re-established
during the
Hundred Years' War from an
ancient Frankish...
-
precedent for the
French royal succession that
would be
known as the
Salic law.
Philip restored somewhat good
relations with the
County of Flanders,...
- hot
water and
trial by cold water.
First mentioned in the 6th-century
Salic law, the
ordeal of hot
water required the
accused to dip
their hand into a...